Countdown to 2000: 1980s Personalities --
Andrew Glazer
The major personalities of the 1980s include two wealthy men: An
introverted billionaire and an outspoken restaurateur.
Sid Soffer, wealthy businessman curmudgeon and collector of cars, began
his battle with Costa Mesa in the 1980s.
He said his front yard was as good of a place as any for his 11 rusted
antique cars. The city declared them a nuisance and towed three away.
Soffer declared the city a nuisance right back and sued. He lost. He also
refused to pay the $300 fine the city slapped on him.
The former owner of the Newport Beach restaurant The Blue Beet, who had a
large wardrobe of white T-shirts, also was cited for violating building
codes when he converted his garage into apartment units. Soffer is now
living on the lam in Las Vegas after being convicted in 1995 for --
surprise, surprise -- code violations.
Donald Bren, who in the 1980s scaled the Forbes magazine list of the
nation’s 400 richest as the chairman of the Irvine Co., tried to be much
more discreet. He tried, but being handsome and the 12th-richest man in
the country, it was hard. Newspapers kept close tabs on who was draped on
his arm at Newport Beach functions -- “Was that Steve McQueen’s widow?”
Bren wanted nothing of his personal life revealed. But his vision for
Orange County -- of which the Irvine Co. owned one-sixth -- was to be
seen by everyone living there. He wanted to create a “total community,
with homes and businesses in which to work and hospitals ... without the
negative environment of other cities.”Sources:
Daily Pilot
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times Magazine
“Newport Beach: The First Century, 1888-1988,” edited by James P. Felton.
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